For Rs1,000 a night, tourists can sample lifestyle of independence leader

Ahmedabad: Tourists searching for peace and simplicity can for the
first time check in to Mahatma Gandhi’s most famous ashram in India. But
don’t expect modern comforts. And chastity is required.

For Rs1,000 (Dh59) a night, tourists can sample the lifestyle of
India’s famously ascetic independence leader by staying at the first
ashram he established, set up in 1915 in the western state of Gujarat.

Guests at the ashram, which opened to holidaymakers earlier this month,
can try their hand at spinning cloth, visit local communities, pray and
meditate, all while wearing khadi — hand-woven cloth — during their
stay.

But they must adhere to Gandhi’s 11 vows that he promoted including
non-violence, no possessions, use of local goods, working for daily
food, self restraint, including chastity, and control of diet.

And they are also encouraged to follow Gandhi’s austere daily routine, such as waking at 5am and undertaking domestic chores.

“The objective of this programme is to allow people to experience a
sustainable lifestyle, to enjoy the simplicity of Gandhi, experience the
virtue of Mahatma,” said Nischalavalamb Barot, a travel agent who
helped develop the programme called “Live Gandhi for a While”.

Gandhi went to stay at the bungalow, now called Kochrab Ashram and then
owned by a lawyer friend, after he returned to India from South Africa
in 1915.

From this base, in a village on the outskirts of the city of Ahmedabad,
he rejected material wealth and developed some of the ideas for which
he became famous.

In one incident, he upset neighbours by inviting a low-caste man, a
so-called “untouchable”, to come and live at the ashram as part of his
campaign against India’s rigid and deeply ingrained caste system.

The ashram is managed by a nearby university called Gujarat Vidyapith,
which Gandhi himself founded in 1920 to “liberate the Indian youth from
the shackles of British colonial rule”.

The “Live with Gandhi” programme was launched on October 2 to coincide
with the 144th anniversary of the birth of Gandhi. Tourists have not yet
made bookings, but Barot stressed there were lots of inquiries.

India has plenty of museums and monuments to honour the country’s
independence icon, whose personal philosophy and ideas are considered
outdated by many in rapidly modernising India.

Known as Mahatma or Great Soul, Gandhi spearheaded a non-violent
campaign against the British Raj that finally saw India gain its freedom
from colonial rule in 1947. He was shot dead by a Hindu hardliner in
New Delhi just months later in 1948.

Despite the many commemorations for Gandhi, Barot, who developed the
programme with the university, said he hoped the ashram offered
something different.

“This is the first time that we are attempting to understand the value
and principles of a sustainable life, which Gandhi believed in and
practised,” said Barot, who operates a sustainable tourism agency.

However he stressed a stay at the ashram would not be an easy one.

“They will have to follow the vows that Gandhi himself followed in the
ashram...They will also wear the khadi throughout the programme.”

Gandhi spun his own cloth and encouraged others to follow suit. He
considered this an important part of his anti-colonial philosophy of
self-reliance, known as “swadeshi”.

Khadi also became a symbol of how then India should base its economy —
on village-based craft instead of industrially-produced cotton often
imported from mills in Britain.

The idea is a far cry from modern-day India, which dismantled
government control over its economy in the 1990s, and opened up India, a
member of the G20, to foreign investment.

Sudarshan Iyengar, vice-chancellor of the Gujarat Vidyapith university
that manages the ashram, said he was confident that opening it to
tourists would help promote Gandhi’s ideals.

“This is a unique programme, which will actually bring change in
society gradually at an individual level and hopefully we will witness a
sustainable future.”

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